Surface treatment of low-k SiOF to prevent metal interaction

ABSTRACT

A method for using low dielective SiOF in a process to manufacture semiconductor products, comprising the steps of: obtaining a layer of SiOF; and depleting fluorine from a surface of the SiOF layer. In a preferred embodiment, the depleting step comprises the step of treating the surface of the layer of SiOF with a plasma containing hydrogen. It is further preferred that the treated surface be passivated. The invention also encompasses a semiconductor chip comprising an integrated circuit with at least a first and second layers, and with a dielective layer of SiOF disposed between the layers, wherein the SiOF dielective layer includes a first region at one edge thereof which is depleted of fluorine to a predetermined depth.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates generally to the field of semiconductor chip processing, and more particularly, to the processing for an interlayer dielectric.

2. Description of the Related Art

Fluorinated SiO₂ (typically PECVD or HDP) can be used to lower the dielectric constant of SiO₂ from, for example, 4.0 to 3.6-3.8. The lowering of the dielectric constant is advantageous for a number of reasons, including to reduce the capacitance of the semiconductor device and thereby increase its performance.

However, fluorine in SiO₂ will react with PVD barrier metals (Ti, TiN, Ta, TaN, Al, Cu, etc.) which are subsequently deposited on the surface of the fluorinated SiO₂. This reaction between fluorine and the barrier metals will cause delamination on flat SiOF surfaces, as well as inside via holes.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Briefly, the present invention comprises, in one aspect, a method for using low dielectric SiOF in a process to manufacture semiconductor products, comprising the steps of obtaining a layer of SiOF; and depleting the fluorine from a surface of the SiOF layer.

In a further aspect of this inventive method, the depleting step comprises the step of treating the surface of the layer of SiOF with a plasma containing hydrogen to yield a treated surface.

In a yet further aspect of the present invention, the method comprises the step of passivating the treated surface.

In a further aspect of the present invention, the passivating step comprises the step of applying substantially pure nitrogen plasma to the treated surface.

In a yet further aspect of the present invention, the nitrogen plasma is applied at a lower plasma bias power and a higher pressure than the hydrogen-containing plasma used in the treating step. In a further aspect of the present invention, the treating step is carried out in a CVD deposition chamber.

In a yet further aspect of the present invention, the depleting step forms a depletion layer that is greater than or equal to 30 Angstroms in thickness.

In a further aspect of the present invention, the passivating step comprises the step of forming a passivation layer that is less than or equal to 25 Angstroms in thickness.

In a further embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for using low dielectric SiOF in a process to manufacture semiconductor integrated circuit chips, comprising the steps of: obtaining a layer of SiOF; treating in a CVD-TiN deposition chamber a surface of the layer of SiOF with a plasma containing hydrogen to deplete fluorine from the surface; passivating the treated surface with substantially pure N₂ plasma; and depositing a layer of TiN.

In a yet further embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor chip is provided comprising: an integrated circuit with at least a first and second layers, and with a dielectric layer of SiOF disposed between said two layers, wherein the SiOF dielectric layer includes a first region at one edge thereof which is depleted of fluorine to a predetermined depth.

In a further aspect of this inventive embodiment, the predetermined depth of the first region is greater than or equal to 30 Angstroms.

In yet a further aspect of the present invention, the depth of the second region is less than or equal to 25 Angstroms.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a process flow diagram for a method in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a cross-section of a select group of layers on a semiconductor chip.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The present invention will be described in its context of use with an interlayer dielectric layer in a conducting layer stack on a semiconductor chip. However, the invention has broad application in any situation where SiOF is utilized as a layer.

Referring now to the drawings, FIG. 1 is a process flow diagram for a method in accordance with the present invention. FIG. 2 illustrates a semiconductor chip 10 in accordance with present invention comprising a bulk substrate and various process layers, designated generally by the numeral 12. A further layer 14 of same type is then deposited. By of example, this further layer 14 might be a conducting layer such as a metallic layer. For purposes of describing the present invention, an SiOF layer 16 is shown as being deposited on this layer 14. The SiOF layer 16 may be formed, by way of example, but not by way of limitation, by introducing a fluorine species during an SiO₂ PECVD or HDP. Typically, after this SiOF deposition step, vias are etched through the SiOF layer 16. This via etch step is followed by a resist strip step and a solvent clean step, in the well known manner.

The present invention then requires application of a process to deplete the fluorine from the top surface of the SiOF layer 16 to yield a depleted layer 18 having a desired thickness. In a preferred embodiment this thickness of the depleted layer 18 is equal to or greater than 30 Angstroms.

In a preferred embodiment, the step used to form the depletion layer 16 is accomplished by treating the surface of the SiOF layer 16 with a plasma containing hydrogen. For example, the plasma may be pure hydrogen, or it may be a diluted H₂ plasma, for example an H₂ /N₂ plasma. The purpose of diluting the hydrogen plasma is to make the hydrogen less volatile.

The hydrogen in the plasma will bond with the fluorine atoms to form HF, which, because of its high vapor pressure and low boiling point, will be vaporized and evacuated from the system.

In a preferred embodiment, the hydrogen plasma treatment is performed in a CVD deposition chamber, such as, for example, an Applied Material CVD deposition chamber. The CVD chamber may be the same chamber used to be used to deposit a subsequent conducting layer, such as TiN. Preferably the CVD chamber for the plasma treatment should have a slightly elevated temperature (5-50° C. higher) relative to the temperature used to deposit the subsequent conducting layer. For example, if a temperature falling in the range of 375° C. to 450° C. is to be used to deposit a subsequent conducting layer 22, then a slightly elevated temperature that is 5° C. to 50° C. higher than the conducting layer CVD deposition temperature is used during the hydrogen plasma treatment step. The purpose of the use of this elevated temperature is to lower the potential that heating during the subsequent conducting layer deposition step will drive the fluorine atoms from the bulk SiOF layer 16 into the fluorine-depleted layer 18.

The other parameters for the hydrogen plasma treatment step will be determined empirically. Typically, the pressure in the CVD chamber will be in the millitorr to torr range, the energy parameter will be in the several hundred watt range, and plasma treatment time will range from 20 seconds to several minutes. Optimized parameters will be determined based on the desired thickness of the depletion layer 18.

In a preferred embodiment, the depleted layer 18 is then passivated to form a passivation layer 20 which is less than the thickness of layer 18. One purpose of the passivation is to bond non-volatile atoms into the depleted layer 18 to lessen the potential for fluorine atoms from the bulk SiOF layer 16 diffusing up into the depleted layer 18 and thereafter reacting with the conducting layer atoms of the subsequently deposited layer 22. This passivation step may be carried out by switching to a pure N₂ plasma in the CVD chamber to form SiON to a thickness that is less than the thickness of the depletion layer 18. For example, the passivation layer 20 could have a thickness of 25 Angstroms or less, for example. Typically, a higher source power will be used in the CVD chamber, for example, 300-400 watts, to cause the nitrogen to bond with the SiO surface to yield an SiON dielectric barrier. This passivated dielectric barrier layer lessens the potential that fluorine atoms will diffuse up to the surface of layer 16 and react with, for example, a Ti or TiN barrier metal.

Note that less bias power (the bias power is different than the plasma power) and a higher pressure condition should be used to treat sidewalls and vias in the SiOF layer 16. For example, a bias power of less than 100 watts could be utilized. One purpose for the lower bias power is to make the plasma less directional so that it will affect the sidewalls.

The exact thickness of the passivation layer 20 may be optimized empirically. Note that a SIMS analysis may be performed to measure the thickness of the depletion layer 18 and the thickness of the passivation layer 20. Ultimately, optimization is achieved when the depletion and passivation layer thickness are such that it can be assumed that the subsequent layer 22 will not peel off during the remaining process steps for the semiconductor chip.

A typical device realized using the present invention method might have bulk SiOF layer 16 of 8,000 Angstroms to 15,000 Angstroms, with a depletion layer 18 of 50 Angstroms, and a passivation layer 20 of 25 Angstroms.

Next, a conducting layer 22 is deposited. By way of example, an in-situ deposition of optimized CVD-TiN may accomplished in the previously mentioned CVD chanber using a nitrogen-rich initial layer. This deposition would then be followed by a standard blanket tungsten deposition to form a layer 24. Note that the present invention is not limited to TiN and Ta. A variety of metals are available to form these conducting layers, including Ti, TiN, Ta, Al, and Cu, for example.

It should be noted that although the present invention is particularly advantageous when used to form an SiOF inter-metal dielectric layer, it has application in any situation where the fluorine atoms in an SiOF layer are causing interaction and/or adhesion problems with other layers.

The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the invention. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto, and their equivalents. 

We claim:
 1. A semiconductor chip comprising:an integrated circuit with at least a first and second layers, and with a dielectric layer of SiOF disposed between said two layers, wherein said SiOF dielectric layer includes a first region at one edge thereof which is depleted of fluorine to a predetermined depth, and wherein said first region includes a second region, extending from said edge to a depth which is less than said depth of said first region, said second region being passivated.
 2. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein said first and second layers are metallic layers.
 3. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein said second region is passivated with nitrogen.
 4. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 2, wherein said second layer is adjacent to said second region and is comprised of TiN.
 5. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein said predetermined depth of said first region is greater than or equal to 30 Angstroms.
 6. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein said predetermined depth of said first region is greater than or equal to 30 Angstroms and said depth of said second region is less than or equal to 25 Angstroms.
 7. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein said depth of said second region is less than or equal to 25 Angstroms.
 8. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 1, wherein the second region comprises SiON.
 9. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 5, wherein said depth of said second region is in a range of from 20 Angstroms to 25 Angstroms.
 10. A semiconductor chip comprising:an integrated circuit with at least a first and second layers, and with a dielectric layer of SiOF disposed between said two layers, wherein said SiOF dielectric layer includes a first region at one edge thereof which is depleted of fluorine to a predetermined depth, and wherein said first region includes a second region, extending from said edge to a depth which is less than said depth of said first region, said second region being passivated, and wherein said passivated second region comprises non-volatile atoms which have been bonded with material of said depleted part of said first region, to said depth of said second region, wherein said bonding inhibits fluorine from diffusing into said second region.
 11. A semiconductor chip as defined in claim 10, wherein said non-volatile atoms comprise nitrogen atoms, and wherein said second region comprises SiON. 